Tomorrow's tides Ttt I'fcherinen ef Wtt Coast Of Vancouver bland til TORI A, Aug. : CT rrioui li the pli(ht f the pll-xti Industry of the West Coast cl Vjn outtr liUnd that Hon, W. M. Dcnnit. mlnUter of labor, hat rarfd (or the provincial government to provide maintenance tsr 10 fishermen and their fam-t ho had depended In Che ri t upon the pllehard run for tht ip livtnj X'. foretold by ()M Wrinkle, V'.nUi patriarch of the Ahousat Indian, the pilchard horde of tht rat Ifir. have failed to reach the wt Coait of Vancouver Mind thlt season. Van v, T P. v; L K I f 1 couver Oils l!m Pacific., .33. p f'"iw . .24. I,v'i. .00,. ' ' h"ld. .11. 'lOont, is. ft r t m. on. iao, Stocks Vancouver 1 44 "rrllle. I.H. Five. II. ' " I 23. . i silver. JHYt. Maho. m. River On. River. .01. 18 'lor. OTVi. Gold Quark, Wl. -i'L 12. i'li.m. .42. MiMourt, .10. Mm, oitfc. ' I'rcat, .S!fc, lv. .01. 024. x f X , 44. na, .11 ' '"id. .02. 6 Province. Xtl?4, ''"'R Star. .20. Toronto "'. 33 56. Nickel, io. 'tin. . ussii M U. M W.ittrra. .97. r-" "-"la. ,84. K 'kUinl, A2. f 11 Antonio, 141. George Laidler 4iaetLilt- waathe flni I - ... . speaker. He atttflMl the w. 11. Mai-kin Co was always anxioua to eo- eeeral with the farmers. His firm had already done so. He had received a letter from the Smlthers Chamber of Commerce asking how much of the Interior potato supply was sold In Prince Rupert and were they prepared to buy Interior I potatoes of nod quality now. The j reply was that HO lone -of potatoes ,eame In laat fall Hla firm bad pur-i chased one carload from Remo and .one from New Haselton. Others had also taken potatoes He sufteated proper radmc and that the ahlp-imenU should be aa good as the samples The samples were always ! rood but the shipments had not al ways been to good. He had received shipments In which the sacks were I of various weights, but the store keepers demanded 100-pound saeka 1 -- s. a KliiAn OniJ MOfe HCUWH whmu m ' to detail Last year he had received a carload which had been hipped In wet weather and. when the potatoes came to be moved, me sacks were rotten ana leu to pieces. This entailed reaacktng. Prices must also be such as woitM mnt with southern shipments TtMv would rather buy from the hrterior because tney reaiaea 11 waHid benefit everyone concerned. lie thought If the market building t utilised, a man ahouM be put Continue' fW 2 bushels to the sere. Coarse grains are poor and the yield will be very light. Oarden yields will also be light Central Saskatchewan ha conditions similar to Southern Saskatchewan as many districts will harvest extremely light crops while others can expect a fair to good wtrun. Prospects are from fair to poor along the Blaine Lake and Lanlgan subdivisions with other subdivisions centering on Prince Albert show ing more promise although harvest will not really be fully under way until next week. Weather In the southern territories of Alberta has continued mostly dry and warm. Some districts received a few scattered slvowers but these were of little benefit at this late date. Grasshoppers continue numerous In some localities along the Drumheller and Oven subdivi sions with their attendant damage. Along these subdivisions wheat will yield from two to ten bushels to the acre. The Three Hills subdivision re-nnrU eraln rloenlne very fast and I cutting has commenced. The esti mated yield Is twenty-five bushels to the acre. Central Alberta along the Camrose. Viking. Vegrcvllle. Alliance. Blackfoot subdivisions report cutting Just nicely commenced. No damage has been experienced from any source and the outrun should be satisfactory. Fine Weather In Peace Weather in the Teace IilvVr has been fine and warm, grain Is ripening fast and cutting will be general within a few days. Prospects for an average crop along the Northern Alberta Railways are good. Harvest operations dried up the flow of cattle on western stock 1 1L1. I,I.K fAtnltAft In a . JTHIU3 11113 !. I, . J strengthening of prices. High me mmm Today's Weather 12:43 pj 118 ft. i Prince Rupert Raining, southeast 6:35 ! 3.9 ft. wind, 18 miles per hour; barometer. 18:38 "o 8.0 ft. 29.97; temperature, 64; sea NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH! COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER choppy. V i XV . No 193. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1933 PRICE: FIVE CENTS RIThIN IS TO TAKE ACTION IN IRAQ PROVINCE AND DOMINION HAVE NEW RELIEF AGREEMENT Marketing of Interior Products in City Was Theme of 4 Speakers Improved Organization Among Fanners, I,ower Freight Kates, Better Grading and More Orderly Shipping Suggested by Wholesalers neral desire to do buainew with the producers of i u rior. accompanied by a number of suggestions as m a shipment could le improved for the benefit of all ' nwl .was expreaeed by a number of local wholesalers t ium-heon oi the Prince Rupert Rotary Club yester-j .iv - moon in the Commodore Cafe, Dr. W. T. Kergin f"-'"f Better grading, packing PILCHARD FAILURE Gwrrnmrnl Ha to Provide Rtlitf and shipping In proper marketable quantities was urged by buyers and the banker member urged that at present Prince Rupert mt well equipped for buying. What was needed waa a better setting organisation amont the farmers. m Khim and be responsible for ih. mrkftlns. educational work would have to be carried out among the farmers. (lltn Oullck nu nuUek. manaeer of Swift niMHim OomDany. said the dlffi Cttlty In buying from uie interior limners in his line was mm w uppiy was not regular and the ith.M thv needed were not avail- Able. A car he had Just opened from his firm conulned 40 ireen meat and the remainder waa made up of t nmrfueu auch as lard. cooked meats, etc Besides that the people in Prince Rupert aemanaru 1. Koitar ruts of meat and more hind quarters than fore quarters. The poorer grades na uc .Rw. care of somewhere. Shippers, he also found, did not send in hlp- mtnta on the days prun e. x -prevemenu along these lines could be made. S, C. Thomson made aome very 8 C. Thomson ., ..tlon His first was that they slwuld Uy to frht rate, and a better wnlc Atprentthenu.werej ihnwA oivril l" ii"1" tv"w HARVESTING IS GENERAL This Year's Western Wheat Crop is Of Fine Quality WINNIPEO. Aug. 18:-Harvestlng la now general over the western provinces except in the more nor therly districts of Saskatchewan and Alberta, according to the weekly crop report of the department of agriculture, Canadian National Railways. In the southern parts of the three provinces threshing ma chines are humming and deliv eries at country points are Increas ing. The quality and grade of the outrun so far Is good and. If fine weather continues during threshing, this year's western wheat crop should be of exceptionally high quality. Cutting in Southern and Central Manitoba la almost completed but Is not so far advanced In the nor therly districts. Threshing Is In full wtns and great variations in yields are being realized. Both quality and yleM'ef Boars grains vary great deal from one farm to another even In similar localities. In Northern Manitoba Dauphin, north and wtet, will harvest a normal yield crop with some district producing one of the beet crops on record. In Saskatchewan Along the Le'wran. Lampman, Avoniea, Oravelbourg. Central ftttUe. Rlverhurst, Olenavon sub-Jtvietons. weather has been warm yith scattered showers and wheat :uUlng Is about T5 completed. In wne of these localities fields are 00 poor to be cut for anything except feed while others show prospects of averaging around twenty Latest in Handcuffs Boy, fi.t - f-A y'u i ia il Luclii' Co.-araat ol vle-eUni- slipped these tin ajrrro- yiu your chasing dars ar- aver They're-hUt in handt uff- .: prt'-d bv A L Elliott. D nvrr formerly of the Royal Camdlan Mounted Polire Ottawa Offers Special Aid to Any Work Done On TransCanada Road Terms of Relief Arrangements Arc Otherwise Aong Same Lines as Now in Existence Contribution Period Etcndcd From August Tto March 31 , VICTORIA, Aug. 18: (CP) Terms of the new OUawa relief agreement have been received by Hon. W. I.TDen-nios, minister of labor and head of the provincial relief organization, and are announced. General terms are little changed from those already in effect The government and representatives of the Union of British Columbia Municipalities will consider them PROMINENT MEN CITED Governor Kolph and Moving Picture Producer Named ih Damace Suit SACRAMENTO. 0L Aug. 18: Several prominent California ns In eluding Governor James Rolph r. D. W. Griffiths, moving picture producer, members of the state parole board and others are cited as defendants in a 00,000 damage suit which was instituted yesterday by Earl Taylor, an ex-convict who charges wrongful detention for 39 days for alleged violation of parole. Taylor had been previously released on parole while serving time for grand theft. Halibut Arrivals Summary Canadian. 68.500 pounds, 5.5c and 4.25c to 5.6c and 4.35o. American None. Canadian Qony. 0.000. AtUn, 5.6c and 4.2$o. Toodle. 11.000; Viking I. 2g.000; R. W.. 10.500. and Morris II.. 16.000. Cold Storage, 5.5c and 4-ttc. Oulvlk. 17.000. and Helen II.. 22 000. Atlln for Butedalc delivery. 6c and 4.5c m Monday, v The Killing of Assyrians Necessitates Exercise of Mandatory Powers Six Hundred Christians Reported to Have Been Slaughtered by Kurds Each Side Holds Other Responsible For Outbreak of Trouble BAGDAD, Iraq, Aug. 18: (CP) Killing of more than six hundred Assyrian Christians in conflicts with the Kurds and Iraq forces in Northern Iraq has climaxed an international situation in which Great Britain, as the formal mandatory power over Iraq, has been moved to take a hand. Bodies to the number of 315 nave been found at . . . . Kthe village of Simel and three hun- ROBBERY IN VANCOUVER "fester-ay VANCOUVER, Aug. 18: 'CD- Two men are In custody in connection with the robbery of R. A. Pearce. cashier for Marshall Wetis Ltd, who was slugged by three men yesterday afternoon and robbed of $70 in cash and $11,000 in checks. The attack took place at the mouth of Shanghai Alley on Pender Street. Allan Joseph McDonald Is charged with robbery with violence while a second man is being held for ' dred more have been dlscovsred in different places In the vicinity of Docuk following the Kurdish raids ;on Assyrian communities. The British government has offered asylum In Cyprus to the As- . :yrtan leader Marshimum who, with his father and brother, was Arrested Following llold-ap of)ttd the government today by Iraq . . . ...1.1 ,1 I t u-i mm HI mhirwd that h wi tnmi. slbie for the Assyrfth'' outbreak which led to the fighUng. The official Iraq contention Is that the Assyrians were killed in a battle after a group of them crossed the Tigris River a fortnight ago and wiped out a force of Iraq troops. Chief Engineer W. E. Balllie of the steamer Prince Rupert Is being accompanied on the present voyage rorth of that steamer by his young son, Fred Balllie. who Is making the round' trhi to Prince Rupert. Anyox and Stewart His Majesty's Ship Dragon Arriving in Prince Rupert Today For Six Days' Visit: Hearty Welcome to be Extended to Warship Carnival' Next Week to be One of Features of Destroyer's Stay agreement sets up arrange-, tt m o Hrncrnn Horht-frnlspr nf th Ampriran.WpU 7ZurXt?Z Ingl ldron of the Royal Navy, in the course of a Pa-1 soectiveiy to the nrovinee and mu- dfio Const cruiw, is due to arrive in Prince Rupert at 3:30- nicipaiiues for various classes ot or snortly mareaiter tnis aucrnoon ami win pay a visit oi relief. On a dollar for dollar basis gjx days to the port. The warship comes here from Comdx, ..w with ika the A-snwin- tH TVwninkrirt t i province, wtll pay one-third of the cost of necesary direct relief in the tnunl- cipaliUes extending from August 1 I of this year to March 31 of next fifty cents per man day on provincial highways. London and of lands. t where she has been engaging leaving this, port on Thursday ofsr next next week, weex. will wui procco proceed to w i-uweu Powell , p 1 , River which wtll be her last port of JiXDCCt JjOWSCr j tO call In British Columbia waters. Af- i ... U uie province mniaws ww on RlTer tp wtll go to the trans-Canada highway, the Do- Portland. Ore., oa her way back to miruon wm conwwuvc her base In the West Indies via Call- per man day towards the work and TornU and panaIM canal other. UK. ALWAKD NAMED llOWSKK CANDIDATE FOR FORT OKOltC.E PRINCE OEOROE. Aug. 18: (CP) Dr. R. W Alwftrd, sitting member of the Legislature, was Wednesday night nominated candidate of the Bowser non-partisan party for Fort rjeorge riding In the forthcoming provincial election. He received a majority over E. H. Burden B.CL-S., nephew of F. P. Burden. Agent-Oentrat at It Is not the first visit to Prince in battery practice, and,' Have Candidate At Prince Rupert 'Rupert of the Dragon which was' here three years ago in the course! VICTORIA. Aug. 18: It is j of a similar cruise. However, her1 nounced here that the Bowser non- I personnel has been largely chanted partisan party is planning to place from that time from her com man- a candidate In the field at Prince der down. Nevertheless, Prince Ru- 'tuperi. j. r.. werryiiera. organizer pert has prepared to extend the or party, expects to Visit usual hearty welcome to the of- Prince Rupert very soon and make fleers and men ot the vessel and arrangements for a nominating various local organisations are co- j convention. operating under the city commissioner in the program of entertainment. The visiting naval men are expected to take a prominent part in connection with the carnival to be staged on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week by the Fair Board. The officer N personnel ot IIM3. Dragon Is as follows: former minister Commander, Captain William Frederick Wake-Walker. O.B.E. j Second In command. Commander Co: Unued on Page 2 Interior Weather Terrace Cloudy to light ratn. calm. 80. - Alyansh Raining, calm, 57. Anyox Raining, calm, 53. Stewart Raining, south wind, 52. , Haselton Cloudy, rain, 62. Smlthers Cloudy, calm. 58. BurtM Lake Cloudy, calm, 54.